All general assistance recipients are required to register for
work, look for work, work to the extent of available employment, and
otherwise fulfill the work requirements, unless the applicant is exempt
from such requirements as provided below.
A.
Employment; rehabilitation.
(1)
All unemployed applicants and members of their households who are 16 years of age or older and who are not attending a full-time primary or secondary school intended to lead to a high school diploma will be required to accept any suitable job offer and/or meet with job counselors, attend employment workshops and rehabilitative services, except as provided below (see Subsection
I, Exemptions). Applicants must demonstrate to the administrator that they are available for work and are actively seeking employment.
(2)
A "suitable job" means any job which the applicant is mentally
and physically able to perform. "Available for work" means that applicants
must make themselves available for work during normal business hours
prevailing in the area, and show that no circumstance exists which
would prevent them from complying with the work requirement.
B.
Verification.
(1)
Unemployed applicants or applicants employed on a part-time
basis will be required to provide verifiable documentation of their
pursuit of employment at the time of each application. At a minimum,
such documentation shall consist of a list of the employers contacted,
the date and time of the application contact, and the name of the
employer representative contacted. "Pursuit of employment" means actually
submitting a written application or applying for a job in person when
reasonable, or submitting a written application or letter of inquiry
to employers.
(2)
For the duration of any repeat applicant's period of unemployment
or partial employment, the administrator will establish the number
of employers per week to whom each nonexempt applicant shall be required
to apply in order to fulfill his or her work search requirements.
The number of weekly employer contacts required by the administrator
shall be reasonably related to the number of potential employers in
the region and the number of hours in the week the applicant has available
for work search activities after considering all time the applicant
must devote to existing employment obligations, workfare obligations,
and required classroom or on-site participation in job training, educational,
or rehabilitation programs. Fulfillment of these requirements will
not be expected at the time of the initial application, but will be
a condition of eligibility for subsequent assistance.
C.
Ineligibility. After being granted assistance at the time of
initial application, applicants will be considered ineligible for
further assistance for 120 days if they, without just cause:
(1)
Refuse to register for employment with the Maine Job Service;
(2)
Refuse to search diligently for employment when the search is
reasonable and appropriate; recipients who unreasonably seek work
at the same places repeatedly will not be considered to be performing
a diligent work search and will be disqualified;
(3)
Refuse to accept a suitable job offer;
(4)
Refuse to participate in an assigned training, education or
rehabilitation program that would assist the applicant in securing
employment;
(5)
Fail to be available for work; or
(6)
Refuse to participate or participate in a substandard manner in the municipal work program (see §
11.5.6).
D.
Ineligibility due to job quit or discharge for misconduct. No
applicant, whether an initial or repeat applicant, who has quit his
or her full-time or part-time job without just cause or who has been
discharged from employment for misconduct [see Appendix I, 26 M.R.S.A. § 1043(23) for the definition] will
be eligible to receive general assistance of any kind for a one-hundred-twenty-day
period from the date of separation from employment [22 M.R.S.A. §§ 4301(8),
4316-A(1-A)].
E.
Just cause. Applicants will be ineligible for assistance for
120 days if they refuse to comply with the work requirements of this
section without just cause. With respect to any work requirement,
just cause will be considered to exist when there is reasonable and
verifiable evidence that:
(1)
The applicant has a physical or mental illness or disability
which prevents him/her from working;
(2)
The work assignment pays below minimum wages;
(3)
The applicant was subject to sexual harassment;
(4)
The applicant is physically or mentally unable to perform required
job tasks, or to meet piece work standards;
(5)
The applicant has no means of transportation to or from work
or a training or rehabilitation program;
(6)
The applicant is unable to arrange for necessary child care
or care of ill or disabled family members; or
(7)
Any reason found to be good cause by the Maine Department of
Labor, or any other verifiable reason the administrator considers
reasonable and appropriate will be accepted as just cause [22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4316-A(5)].
F.
Applicant's burden of establishing just cause. If the administrator
finds that the applicant has violated a work-related rule without
just cause, it shall be the responsibility of the applicant to establish
the presence of just cause (22 M.R.S.A. § 4316-A).
G.
Eligibility regained.
(1)
Persons who are disqualified for 120 days because they violated
a work requirement may regain their eligibility if and only when they
become employed or otherwise satisfy the administrator that they are
complying with the work requirement by fulfilling the work requirement
or requirements they violated.
(2)
For the purpose of regaining eligibility by becoming employed,
"employment" shall mean employment by an employer as defined in 26
M.R.S.A. § 1043 et seq., or the performance of a service
for an employer who withholds from the employee a social security
tax pursuant to federal law.
(3)
The special provisions regarding the opportunity to regain eligibility
after a disqualification for workfare violations are detailed in § 115.6
of this title, under "Eligibility regained."
H.
Dependents.
(1)
Failure of an otherwise eligible person to comply with the work
requirements shall not affect the eligibility of any member of the
person's household who is not capable of working, including:
(b) An elderly, ill, or disabled person; and
(c) A person whose presence is required in order to
provide care for any child under six years of age or for any ill or
disabled member of the household [22 M.R.S.A. § 4309(3)].
(2)
In the event one (or more) member(s) of a household is disqualified
and assistance is requested for those remaining members of the household
who are dependents, the eligibility of those dependents will be calculated
by dividing the maximum level of assistance available to the entire
household by the total number of household members.
I.
Exemptions.
(1)
The above work requirements do not apply to any person who is
elderly, physically or mentally ill or disabled. Any person whose
presence is required to care for any preschool age child or for any
ill or disabled member of the household is also exempt from these
requirements.
(2)
The requirements of this section will not be imposed so as to
interfere with an applicant's existing employment, ability to
pursue a bona fide job offer, ability to attend an interview for possible
employment, classroom participation in a primary or secondary educational
program intended to lead to a high school diploma, classroom or on-site
participation in a training program which is either approved by the
Department of Labor or determined by the Department of Labor to be
expected to assist the applicant in securing employment, or classroom
participation in a degree-granting program operated under the control
of the Department of Labor.
Each applicant has the responsibility to make a good-faith effort to utilize every available or potential resource that may reduce his or her need for general assistance (see §
11.2.2 of this title for definition of "resources"). People who refuse or fail to make a good-faith effort to secure a potential resource after receiving written notice to do so are disqualified from receiving assistance until they make an effort to secure the resource. Applicants are required to prove that they have made a good-faith effort to secure the resource (22 M.R.S.A. § 4317).
A.
Minors.
(1)
A minor under the age of 18 who has never married and is applying
independently for general assistance and who is pregnant or has a
dependent child or children will be eligible to receive general assistance
only if the minor is residing in the home of his or her parent, legal
guardian or other adult relative, in which case the entire household
will be evaluated for eligibility. Exceptions to this limitation on
eligibility will be made when:
(a) The minor is residing in a foster home, maternity
home, or other adult-supervised supportive living arrangement; or
(b) The minor has no living parent or the whereabouts
of both parents are unknown; or
(c) No parent will permit the minor to live in the
parent's home; or
(d) The minor has lived apart from both parents for
at least one year before the birth of any dependent child; or
(e) The DHHS determines that the physical or emotional
health or safety of the minor or the minor's dependent child
or children would be jeopardized if the minor and his or her child
or children lived with a parent; or
(f) The DHHS determines, in accordance with its regulation,
that there is good cause to waive this limitation on eligibility [22
M.R.S.A. § 4309(4)].
(2)
Any person under the age of 25 who is applying independently
from his or her parents for general assistance will be informed that,
until he or she reaches the age of 25, the applicant's parents
are still legally liable for his or her support and the municipality
has the right to seek recovery from the parents of the cost of all
assistance granted to such a recipient to the extent his or her parents
are financially capable of repaying the municipality (22 M.R.S.A.
§ 4319).
(3)
With regard to such application, the municipality may seek verification
of the applicant's need for general assistance by contacting
his or her parents. If the applicant's parents declare a willingness
to provide the applicant with his or her basic needs directly, and
there is no convincing evidence that the applicant would be jeopardized
by relying on his or her parents for basic needs, the administrator
may find the applicant not to be in need of general assistance for
the reason that his or her needs can be provided by a legally liable
relative.
B.
Mental or physical disability. Any applicant who has a mental
or physical disability must make a good-faith effort to utilize any
medical or rehabilitative services which have been recommended by
a physician, psychologist or other professional retraining or rehabilitation
specialist when the services are available to the applicant and would
not constitute a financial burden or create a physical risk to the
individual.
C.
Written notice; disqualification. The administrator will give
each applicant written notice whenever the applicant is required to
utilize any specific potential resource(s). Any applicant who refuses
to utilize potential resources, without just cause, after receiving
written seven-day notice will be ineligible for further assistance
until he/she has made a good-faith effort to utilize or obtain the
resources. General assistance will not be withheld from the applicant
pending receipt of a resource if the applicant has made, or is in
the process of making, a good-faith effort to obtain the resource.
D.
Forfeiture of benefits.
(1)
Any applicant who forfeits receipt of or causes a reduction
in benefits from another public assistance program due to fraud, misrepresentation,
a knowing or intentional violation of program rules or a refusal to
comply with that program's rules without just cause will be ineligible
to receive general assistance to replace the forfeited benefits. To
the extent the forfeited benefits can be considered income under general
assistance law, the worth of the forfeited benefits will be considered
income that is available to the applicant for the duration of the
forfeiture.
(2)
To the extent the forfeited benefits were provided not in the
form of income but, rather, in the form of a specific, regularly issued
resource of a calculable value, that resource, up to its forfeited
value, need not be replaced with general assistance for a period of
120 days from the date of the forfeiture—unless the municipality
is prohibited by federal or state law from considering the forfeited
resource as available with respect to local public assistance programs
(22 M.R.S.A. § 4317).
No one will have his or her assistance terminated, reduced,
or suspended prior to being given written notice and an opportunity
for a fair hearing (22 M.R.S.A. §§ 4321 to 4322). Each
person will be notified, in writing, of the reasons for his or her
ineligibility, and any person disqualified for not complying with
this title will be informed, in writing, of the period of ineligibility.
A.
Work requirement. Applicants/recipients who do not comply with a work requirement are disqualified from receiving assistance for a period of 120 days (unless they regain their eligibility) (see §§
11.5.5 and
11.5.6). If an applicant/recipient is provided assistance and does not comply with the work requirement, the applicant/recipient shall be disqualified for 120 days following the end of the period covered by the grant of assistance. The administrator shall give recipients written notice that they are disqualified as soon as the administrator has sufficient knowledge and information to render a decision of ineligibility.
B.
Fraud. People who commit fraud are disqualified from receiving assistance for a period of 120 days (see §
11.6.4, Fraud, of this title). The administrator shall give recipients written notice that they are ineligible as soon as the administrator has sufficient knowledge and information to render a decision. If the disqualification for fraud is issued before the expiration of a grant of assistance, the period of ineligibility shall commence on the day following the end of the period covered by the grant of assistance. If fraud is discovered after the period covered by the grant of assistance has expired, the period of ineligibility will commence on the day of the written notice of ineligibility.
An applicant who is found ineligible for unemployment compensation
benefits because of a finding of fraud by the Department of Labor
pursuant to 26 M.R.S.A. § 1051(1) is ineligible to receive
general assistance to replace the forfeited unemployment compensation
benefits for the duration of the forfeiture established by the Department
of Labor (22 M.R.S.A. § 4317).